Top News

Why children should sleep early

MAKING sure little ones get enough sleep might just be one of the best things one could do for their health, both now and later on, experts have said.

At a time communication gadgets are on the increase, with addiction taking sleep off most men, children should be spared, they must be encouraged to sleep early.

Scientists have long known that children who don’t get enough sleep may be at an increased risk of obesity, among other health concerns.

A new study has even suggested that having a late bedtime is linked to a greater obesity risk later in life, too.

“This study adds to a body of research that demonstrates that young children benefit from having a regular bedtime and bedtime routine,” said Sarah Anderson, lead author of the study and associate professor of epidemiology at the College of Public Health, Ohio State University.


How bedtime may be linked to obesity

It is a general belief that foods can cause obesity in children, but the study revealed that sleeping pattern and timing could be factors determining obesity.

For the study, which was published in the September edition of the Journal of Paediatrics, researchers analysed data on 977 children, who were part of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development’s Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development.

The data, which tracked the children from pre-school age to adolescence, indicated at what time they went to bed when they were about 4½ years old, as well as their height, weight and body mass index when they were about 15.

 

Kids and Obesity

After comparing the children’s bedtimes with their health as teenagers, the researchers found that only 10 per cent of the children who went to bed at 8.00 p.m. or earlier during their pre-school years were obese as teenagers.  However, 23 per cent of the children who went to bed after 9.00 p.m. as pre-schoolers were obese as teenagers.

For the children who went to bed between 8.00 p.m. and 9.00 p.m. as pre-schoolers, about 16 per cent were obese as teenagers.

“Pre-school age children with early weekday bedtimes were half as likely as children with late bedtimes to be obese as adolescents. This was true even after taking into account other factors that we know are related to risk for obesity,” Anderson said.

“Other research has shown benefits for children’s behaviour, cognitive development and attention.

“Regular bedtime routines, including an early bedtime, are also linked to fewer sleep problems, such as night time awakenings or difficulty falling asleep,” she said.

 

How exactly can sleep habits early in life be linked to health outcomes later in life?

There are a number of plausible potential mechanisms in this case, Anderson said.

“First, children who have a regular early bedtime are more likely to get enough sleep. Not getting enough sleep can result in changes in the hormones controlling appetite and metabolism.

“Also, staying up later in the evening provides more opportunity for snacking and viewing television commercials that promote snacking.

“Recommending that preschool-aged children are in bed by 8.00 p.m. is a potentially modifiable household routine that may help to prevent obesity,” she added.

 

Early snooze benefits the brain, too

While an early and full night’s sleep for children can benefit their bodies, it also can improve their brains.

“An early bedtime benefits a child’s physical health, as well as mood and mental health, because it allows time for restorative sleep, which is important for the repair and recovery of the brain and the body,” said Reut Gruber, researcher at McGill University in Canada and director of the Attention, Behaviour and Sleep Lab at the Douglas Mental Health University Institute.

 

What your sleep says about your health

“Sleep deprivation impairs the physiological processes that allow for adaptive emotional regulation. Emotional regulation processes are dependent on a ‘dialogue’ or interactions between the parts of the brain called prefrontal cortex and the amygdala,” she said.

“These neural areas that govern emotional regulation are sensitive to sleep deprivation. When people are sleep-deprived, the connectivity between the prefrontal cortex and amygdala is impaired, and this leads to an individual’s difficulty to regulate emotions.”

Additionally, “there is a vicious negative cycle, with sleep deprivation impairing emotional regulation and with impaired emotional regulation leading to increased stress and arousal, further interfering with sleep,” Gruber said.

A small three-week study published in the Journal of Paediatric Psychology in 2013 involved 32 children, between eight and 12 years old, who were instructed to go to sleep either one hour later or earlier than usual. They were asked to complete tasks that measured emotional functioning, memory attention and math fluency at the end of each week, and the researchers found that going to sleep one hour later impaired children’s performance on the tasks.

A separate 2010 study published in the journal ‘Sleep’ found that adolescents with bedtimes set at 10.00 p.m. or earlier were significantly less likely to suffer from depression and to have suicidal thoughts.

The research involved analysing data from 15,659 students in grades seven to 12 who participated in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, which included their bedtimes, as well as their mental health.

 

Reasons for early bedtime

“A variety of theories have been developed to explain why we need to sleep,” said Dr Sumit Bhargava, clinical associate professor of paediatrics at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Sleep physician at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital.

“Some of the reasons are energy conservation theory: We sleep to conserve energy so we can be functional during the day.

“Restorative theory suggests we sleep to ‘restore’ something that we lose while awake, with the body repairing and rejuvenating itself. Important hormones are secreted while we sleep and byproducts of the brain’s activity are cleared,” he said.

 

Bedtime advice for parents

Therefore, a child’s bedtime is not nearly as important as the amount of sleep he or she is getting each night, Bhargava has said.

“An early bedtime per se, will not necessarily affect a child’s physical health or mood and mental health in a positive way. The goal should be, choose an age-appropriate bedtime that allows the individual child to get the hours of sleep the child needs,” he said.

“Set an appropriate bedtime based upon the amount of sleep your child needs to be functional and effective during the day. Then, be consistent with it, even on weekends; sleep is just as important to human life as eating and breathing. We spend almost a third of our lives sleeping,” he added.

Culled from cnn.com

OA

Recent Posts

What to know about India’s airstrikes on Pakistan, Kashmir

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the country would hunt the suspects "till the ends of…

18 minutes ago

21 out of 24 defected opposition lawmakers since July 2024 go to APC — Reps

No fewer than 21 out of 24 opposition members of the House of Representatives have…

27 minutes ago

EFCC questions Iyabo Ojo over spraying of Naira, Dollars at daughter’s wedding

Nollywood actress and filmmaker Iyabo Ojo has broken her silence following an invitation by the…

35 minutes ago

6 Businesses You Should Never Do

Starting a business can be exciting, but not all businesses are worth your time or…

50 minutes ago

Kano: Police arrest woman for allegedly killing husband nine days after wedding

Kano State Police Command has confirmed the arrest of 18-year-old Saudat Jibril for allegedly killing…

1 hour ago

Taravest 2025: Taraba open for business — Commissioner

Taraba State Commissioner for Information, and Reorientation, Barr Zainab Usman Jalingo has disclosed that with…

1 hour ago

Welcome

Install

This website uses cookies.